Hall v. Odom

81 S.E.2d 129, 240 N.C. 66, 1954 N.C. LEXIS 639
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedApril 7, 1954
Docket164
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 81 S.E.2d 129 (Hall v. Odom) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hall v. Odom, 81 S.E.2d 129, 240 N.C. 66, 1954 N.C. LEXIS 639 (N.C. 1954).

Opinion

Bobbitt, J.

The landlord’s lien on crops for the payment of rent in agricultural tenancies is a statutory lien. The English law of distress and sale for nonpayment of rent did not become a part of the law of this State. Dalgleish v. Grandy, 1 N.C. 249. Until created by statute, a landlord had no lien on the crop of his tenant for the payment of rent. He (the lessor) stood on “no better footing” than other creditors of the lessee. Deaver v. Rice, 20 N.C. 567; Howland v. Forlaw, 108 N.C. 567, 13 S.E. 173; Reynolds v. Taylor, 144 N.C. 165, 56 S.E. 871.

Superseding prior statutes, the Landlord and Tenant Act of 1876-7 (1876-7, Oh. 283) was enacted; and, except in respect of matters not relevant here, this statute has continued in effect without modification, being G.S. 42-15 and providing, in pertinent part, as follows :

“When lands are rented or leased by agreement, written or oral, for agricultural purposes, or are cultivated by a cropper, unless otherwise agreed between the parties to the lease or agreement, any and all crops raised on said lands shall be deemed and held to be vested in possession of the lessor or his assigns at all times, until the rents for said lands are paid and until all the stipulations contained in the lease or agreement are performed, or damages in lieu thereof paid to the lessor or his assigns, and until said party or his assigns is paid for all advancements made and expenses incurred in making and saving said crops. . . .
“This lien shall be preferred to all other liens, and the lessor or his assigns is entitled, against the lessee or cropper, or the assigns of either, who removes the crop or any part thereof from the lands without the consent of the lessor or his assigns, or against any other person who may get possession of said crop or any part thereof, to the remedies given in an action upon a claim for delivery of personal property.”

*69 Harrison v. Ricks, 71 N.C. 7, was decided in 1874; and in that case Justice Rodman gives a clear analysis of the rules for determining whether under the special terms of various rental contracts the relationship created is that of landlord-tenant or that of owner-cropper. While difficulties often arise in making a determination as to the appropriate classification when the rent to be paid is a specified share of the crop, no difficulty is encountered when the rent is a fixed amount of money. As stated by Rodman, J.: “If the occupier is to pay a money rent, the title to the crop must necessarily be in him in order that he may convert it into money. He is, therefore, strictly a tenant.”

In Harrison v. Ricks, supra, the rental contract was held to create the landlord-tenant relationship, albeit the rent to be paid was specified to be one-half of the crop. The tenant conveyed the crop to the plaintiff Harrison as security for advancements. The defendant (landlord) seized the crop, asserting the priority of his landlord’s lien and alleging that the tenant had no right to convey the crop to the plaintiff. It was held: first, that the tenant was the owner of the crop and had the right to convey it subject to the lien, if any, of the landlord; and second, the landlord had no lien since under the Act of IS 68-9, Oh. 64, then applicable, a written rental contract was a prerequisite to a landlord’s lien. The Act of 1876-7 eliminated the necessity for a written rental contract as a prerequisite to a landlord’s lien.

The Act of 1876-7 (G.S. 42-15) gives the landlord a preferred lien on the entire crop, regardless of whether the relationship is that of landlord-tenant or that of owner-cropper, until the rent is paid. The statute vests the possession of the crop in the landlord; and, under this right of possession, he has the right to use force, if necessary, to prevent unauthorized removal by the tenant. S. v. Austin, 123 N.C. 749, 31 S.E. 731. Moreover, if the tenant, without the consent of the landlord, willfully removes the crop without giving five days’ notice of removal, before satisfying the landlord’s lien, he is guilty of a misdemeanor. G.S. 42-22. In such case, the tenant is liable both civilly and criminally; for the constructive possession of the crop is in the landlord. Jordan v. Bryan, 103 N.C. 59, 9 S.E. 135.

The landlord’s lien exists by virtue of the statute. G.S. 42-15. No written instrument is required or contemplated. The registration acts, which apply only to written instruments capable of registration, have no significance relative to a landlord’s lien. See Spence v. Pottery Co., 185 N.C. 218, 117 S.E. 32. The statute itself gives notice to all the world of the law relative to a landlord’s lien.

While not always expressly stated, it is implicit throughout the many decisions of this Court that the landlord’s lien remains intact until the rent is paid and all who deal with a tenant with reference to the crop are *70 charged with notice thereof. Belcher v. Grimsley, 88 N.C. 88; Sugg v. Farrar, 107 N.C. 123, 12 S.E. 236; White v. Boyd, 124 N.C. 177, 32 S.E. 495; Burwell v. Warehouse Co., 172 N.C. 79, 89 S.E. 1064; Rhodes v. Fertilizer Co., 220 N.C. 21, 16 S.E. 2d 408; Adams v. Warehouse, 230 N.C. 704, 55 S.E. 2d 331. As stated by Ruffin, J., in Belcher v. Grimsley, supra: “Nothing short of an actual payment or a complete satisfaction of the lessor’s demands, meets the words of the statute or will serve to determine his lien, or title. Neither can the fact that the defendants had no notice of the plaintiff’s claim at all impair it, in the absence of any suggestion of fraud on his part. It is a question of title, and the tenant can convey no better right to the property than he himself was possessed of. The principle of caveat empior applies with full force to the case.”

The result is that the tenant, who owns the crop subject to the landlord’s rights and lien, has the right to sell the crop but in the same plight in which he holds it, i.e., the purchaser from the tenant takes subject to the landlord’s lien and, where the crop remains on the land, the purchaser can remove the crop only by consent of the landlord until the rent is paid. A purchaser from the tenant, or an auction sales warehouse selling as his agent, is dealing with a crop with statutory notice of the lien outstanding thereon. Therefore, nothing else appearing, if the defendants purchased the tobacco from Booker, or sold the tobacco as agents for Booker, and paid Booker therefor, without regard to the landlord’s lien of the plaintiff, they would be accountable to the plaintiff on the basis of money had and received for the proceeds of sale up to the balance due as rent. White v. Boyd, supra.

It is not to be understood that a landlord cannot by agreement, express or implied, waive his lien, or by his acts and conduct be estopped from asserting his lien.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
81 S.E.2d 129, 240 N.C. 66, 1954 N.C. LEXIS 639, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-v-odom-nc-1954.